Evening light on the south shore of Lake Turkana with the volcanic cone of Nabuyatom on the lake edge
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19.4×13.0cm 28ppcm
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Imágenes relacionadas
- Evening light on the south shore of Lake Turkana with the volcanic cone of Nabuyatom on the lake edge
- The Suguta Valley is a low-lying area of salt pans,mud flats and volcanic cones surrounded by awesome mountain ranges. Once,a part of Lake Turkana,the place is one of the hottest and most unpleasant corners of Kenya,a hell-on-earth where midday temperatures can reach 1400 F in the shade. Nomadic Turkana herdsmen bring their livestock here for salt but they never stay long.
- An aerial view of South Island, Lake Turkanas largest island. Situated in the southern sector of the lake where the water reaches a depth of 374 feet, the island is a spine of volcanic cones and hills covering 15 square miles. The lava flows are remarkably well preserved there.
- A series of lava rock pools are situated just off the southern end of Lake Turkana,northern Kenya's Jade Sea. The colour of the water is caused by extreme alkalinity in which green algae with a high chlorophyll content grows.
- An aerial view of the volcanic cones at the inlet of Ghoubbet el Kharäb (the Devil's Throat),a region of high seismic activity where deep fractures in the lava continue to widen year by year.
- Nabuyatom Crater, Lake Turkana, Kenya, Africa
- Andrews volcano is one of the numerous volcanic craters dotting the volcanic ridge, known as The Barrier, that separated the Suguta Valley from Lake Turkana several million years ago. The last eruption from a side vent took place just over 100 years ago.
- Andrews volcano is one of the numerous volcanic craters dotting the volcanic ridge, known as The Barrier, that separated the Suguta Valley from Lake Turkana several million years ago. The last eruption took place just over 100 years ago.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- The lava barrier that separates the southern end of Lake Turkana from the Suguta Valley. South Island is in the distance while the extinct volcanic crater, Abil Agituk, is close to the lakeshore. The region is pockmarked with volcanic cones.
- Lake Natron in northern Tanzania is one of the most alkaline of the Rift system.As its waters evaporate in the intense heat, sodium sesquicarbonate, known as trona or natron, solidifies to resemble giant coral heads in brightly coloured water. Visible beyond the lake is Ol doinyo Lengai the only active volcano in the Gregory Rift.
- A view from the top of Telekis Volcano looking north to the southern end of Lake Turkana and South Island beyond. Named after Count Teleki, an Austrian nobleman, who led the first European expedition to the region in 1888.
- An aerial view of the southern end of Lake Turkana, which is named Von H hnel Bay after the Austrian naval officer who was part of an epic journey of exploration to reach the lake in 1888.The perfectly formed cone that juts into the lake is called Naboi eetom by the Turkana people.
- Volcanic craters and lava dotting the volcanic ridge, known as The Barrier, that divided Lake Turkana and the Suguta Valley.
- Some of the numerous volcanic craters dotting the volcanic ridge, known as The Barrier
- Nabuyatom crater juts into the jade waters at the southern end of Lake Turkana.
- The perfectly shaped volcanic cone called Nabuyatom juts into the jade waters of Lake Turkana at the inhospitable southern end of the lake, known as Von Hohnel Bay.